@Ricardus Ugh. That reminds me of another soundtrack travesty: The Ivory Tower from the Neverending Story soundtrack.
Luckily, in my case, a fan managed to cut together a voiceless film version of it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yegQ9X2QSeI
It turns out some fandoms can be particularly dedicated on that front. For example, the Thomas the Tank Engine fans.
Some of them do things like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iafxUXvQ7L0 by splicing clips from different dubs and others even identify the synths used and make new masters.
@skunksarebetter You neglected to mention that paying customers can get a test suite that aims for full Modified Condition/Decision Coverage, and that it gets used in avionics.
@Ricardus My personal gripe in that vein is that, as far as I can tell, there exists no recording of the version of the Star Trek: The Next Generation theme used in the end of Star Trek: Insurrection that isn't painfully dynamic range compressed.
Listen and cringe:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMsmsQUC2_4
I don't expect it to make me tear up like the "welcome to Jurassic Park" moment in the Jurassic Park theme (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJlmYh27MHg), but, as-is, it just leaves me feeling cheated.
@Nacor To be honest, I'm against mass-deletion tools.
...but then I'm an archivist type who tries to make it feasible to save everything he reads to disk and believes that fanfiction sites should back their archives with git so readers can see old revisions.
@lordalveric Relying on a password manager that checks domains (eg. the one built into your browser) is a good first step to protect against this sort of thing.
@hrisskar To be honest, I'm kind of overwhelmed by seeing that ` && youtube-dl`. It's convention for a CLI tool that accepts one path or URL as input to accept any number of them in a single invocation.
Also, single quotes are only needed for a YouTube or Invidious URL if it contains ampersands which the shell would otherwise interpret as the "run in background" version of a semicolon.
Example:
youtube-dl https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cIANk7zQ05w https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pwe-pA6TaZk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7X6Yeydgyg
Reminds me of the "For the love of God, never do this" proof-of-concept I wrote but never shared where I used history.replaceState to scroll a message in the address bar.
(Among other reasons, when I tested it, it appeared to be causing pathological thrashing in the SQLite database Firefox uses to store history and bookmarks information.)
@alexbuzzbee @zladuric@mastodon.technology They'd probably be worried about disqualifying themselves from Microsoft's patent promise.
> what kind of self-respecting linux user is going to install f**king Edge on their system?
People who need to test on it and see it as a better alternative to the modern.ie testing VMs.
> there are people out there who prefer PS over bash? Like, seriously?
My understanding is that such people only prefer it in the context of scripting administration of heterogeneous Windows/Linux LAN environments.
@VikingKong@fosstodon.org @unicornfarts @skunksarebetter Which supports the interpretation that we now think of "data" as an uncountable noun.
It's the same pattern with other uncountable nouns. (eg. "sand pile")
@LittleWytch Should be. :)
For future reference, The Unarchiver can also unpack un-encrypted .sit files and the old open-source 1.10.1 CLI version even got ported to Linux. (It's in the package repositories of Debian-family distros as "unar", for example.)
https://theunarchiver.com/
https://packages.debian.org/buster/unar
...and, because my inner pedant won't shut up about it, Stuffit Expander served an equivalent role to WinZip, but it was not a version of it.
@LittleWytch Wow. Thanks for putting all that effort into it. :)
@namark @Absinthe How is that "all of the above but also one more thing"?
Being able to answer a call one-handed so you don't have to drop everything you're carrying has been a staple of mobile phone use since at least the days when feature phones were the best you could get, and the UI is mapped out such that, if you can do that, you should also be able to snap a photo or take a video.
(To the point where, when you're in the camera app, one of the volume buttons becomes the camera's shutter.)
As for your argument, I don't dispute that phones are driven far too little by utility. Just look at fashion's effect on battery life, the removal of the SD card slot, the dying-off of the headphone jack, physical "slider" keyboards, and so on.
There's a reason that, for my mobile computing, I seek out alternative devices like the OpenPandora.
What we seem to disagree on is the *degree* to which this effect is allowed to override the designers' conceptions of how large a phone a given market will accept.
I've been watching smartphones develop for a long time and, to my eyes, the growth in size seems to have tapered off.
I *suppose*, to be fair, the segment of the market with smaller hands could be willing to bear "just beyond ideal, but no further", but it seems like an implausible line to draw in the sand during the period when smaller and larger models coexisted.
Linux user, open-source enthusiast, science buff, and retro-hobbyist who occasionally reviews fanfiction.